All Stories

  1. Is the enhanced dispersal rate seen at invasion fronts a behaviourally plastic response to encountering novel ecological conditions?
  2. The behavioural consequences of sex reversal in dragons
  3. The straight and narrow path: the evolution of straight-line dispersal at a cane toad invasion front
  4. Latitudinal and seasonal variation in reproductive effort of the eastern fence lizard (Sceloporus undulatus)
  5. Delegation to automaticity: the driving force for cognitive evolution?
  6. Predation on invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina) by native Australian rodents
  7. Morphology, Reproduction and Diet in Australian and Papuan Death Adders (Acanthophis, Elapidae)
  8. Pentastomids of wild snakes in the Australian tropics
  9. Rapid acclimation to cold allows the cane toad to invade montane areas within its Australian range
  10. The behavioural and physiological strategies of bird and reptile embryos in response to unpredictable variation in nest temperature
  11. Effects of early social isolation on the behaviour and performance of juvenile lizards, Chamaeleo calyptratus
  12. Does Invasion Success Reflect Superior Cognitive Ability? A Case Study of Two Congeneric Lizard Species (Lampropholis, Scincidae)
  13. Foreword
  14. Phenotypic Plasticity in Embryonic Development of Reptiles: Recent Research and Research Opportunities in China
  15. Ecology and Behaviour of Burton’s Legless Lizard (Lialis burtonis, Pygopodidae) in Tropical Australia
  16. Crossing boundaries: when snake science slithers into art
  17. The Role of Predation in Shaping Crocodilian Natural History
  18. Showing Red: Male Coloration Signals Same-Sex Rivals in an Australian Water Dragon
  19. Do invasive cane toads affect the parasite burdens of native Australian frogs?
  20. The effects of weather conditions on dispersal behaviour of free‐ranging lizards (Tiliqua, Scincidae) in tropical Australia
  21. The Interacting Effects of Ungulate Hoofprints and Predatory Native Ants on Metamorph Cane Toads in Tropical Australia
  22. Colour discrimination and associative learning in hatchling lizards incubated at ‘hot’ and ‘cold’ temperatures
  23. Cues for communal egg-laying in lizards (Bassiana duperreyi, Scincidae)
  24. Transgenerational sex determination: the embryonic environment experienced by a male affects offspring sex ratio
  25. Mechanisms of competition between tadpoles of Australian frogs (Litoria spp.) and invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina)
  26. Egg incubation effects generate positive correlations between size, speed and learning ability in young lizards
  27. Seasonal dynamics of the lungworm, Rhabdias pseudosphaerocephala, in recently colonised cane toad (Rhinella marina) populations in tropical Australia
  28. Larger Body Size at Metamorphosis Enhances Survival, Growth and Performance of Young Cane Toads (Rhinella marina)
  29. Ecology: The Lunch of a Lifetime
  30. A review of ecological interactions between native frogs and invasive cane toads in Australia
  31. Can Reptile Embryos Influence Their Own Rates of Heating and Cooling?
  32. Habitat selection by bluetongue lizards (Tiliqua, Scincidae) in tropical Australia: a study using GPS telemetry
  33. Chemosensory discrimination of social cues mediates space use in snakes, Cryptophis nigrescens (Elapidae)
  34. After the crash: How do predators adjust following the invasion of a novel toxic prey type?
  35. Not just a chastity belt: the functional significance of mating plugs in garter snakes, revisited
  36. Movements and Habitat Use of an Endangered Snake, Hoplocephalus bungaroides (Elapidae): Implications for Conservation
  37. Effects of an invasive species on refuge‐site selection by native fauna: The impact of cane toads on native frogs in the Australian tropics
  38. Interacting biocontrol programmes: invasive cane toads reduce rates of breakdown of cowpats by dung beetles
  39. Reptiles
  40. Invasive parasites in multiple invasive hosts: the arrival of a new host revives a stalled prior parasite invasion
  41. Competing tadpoles: Australian native frogs affect invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina) in natural waterbodies
  42. Invader impact clarifies the roles of top‐down and bottom‐up effects on tropical snake populations
  43. Behavioral and physiological correlates of the geographic distributions of amphibious sea kraits (Laticauda spp.)
  44. The early toad gets the worm: cane toads at an invasion front benefit from higher prey availability
  45. The benefits of habitat restoration for rock‐dwelling velvet geckos Oedura lesueurii
  46. Some snakes are lovers, others are fighters
  47. Population demography of an endangered lizard, the Blue Mountains Water Skink
  48. Behaviour and survivorship of a dasyurid predator (Antechinus flavipes) in response to encounters with the toxic and invasive cane toad (Rhinella marina)
  49. Larval interactions with an invasive species (the Cane Toad Rhinella marina ) affect life-history traits in an Australian anuran (the Marbled Frog Limnodynastes convexiusculus )
  50. Identifying optimal barriers to halt the invasion of cane toads Rhinella marina in arid Australia
  51. Cane Toads on Cowpats: Commercial Livestock Production Facilitates Toad Invasion in Tropical Australia
  52. Road transect surveys do not reveal any consistent effects of a toxic invasive species on tropical reptiles
  53. HOST-PARASITE RELATIONSHIPS DURING A BIOLOGIC INVASION: 75 YEARS POSTINVASION, CANE TOADS AND SYMPATRIC AUSTRALIAN FROGS RETAIN SEPARATE LUNGWORM FAUNAS
  54. Phenotypic divergence between seasnake (Emydocephalus annulatus) populations from adjacent bays of the New Caledonian Lagoon
  55. Manipulative Mothers and Selective Forces: The Effects of Reproduction On Thermoregulation In Reptiles
  56. Predation on the eggs and larvae of invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina) by native aquatic invertebrates in tropical Australia
  57. Australian Freshwater Crocodiles ( Crocodylus johnstoni ) Transport Their Hatchlings to the Water
  58. Reply to comment on ‘chainsawing for conservation: ecologically informed tree removal for habitat management’
  59. Spatial ecology of bluetongue lizards (Tiliqua spp.) in the Australian wet–dry tropics
  60. Aggressive Transition between Alternative Male Social Tactics in a Long-Lived Australian Dragon (Physignathus lesueurii) Living at High Density
  61. Predicting the impacts of climate change on genetic diversity in an endangered lizard species
  62. Size and sex matter: infection dynamics of an invading parasite (the pentastome Raillietiella frenatus) in an invading host (the cane toad Rhinella marina)
  63. Corticosterone–immune interactions during captive stress in invading Australian cane toads (Rhinella marina)
  64. Inadvertent consequences of community‐based efforts to control invasive species
  65. Exploiting intraspecific competitive mechanisms to control invasive cane toads (Rhinella marina)
  66. Habitat Selection in a Rocky Landscape: Experimentally Decoupling the Influence of Retreat Site Attributes from That of Landscape Features
  67. Nest‐site selection by crocodiles at a rocky site in the Australian tropics: Making the best of a bad lot
  68. The consequences of alternative parental care tactics in free‐ranging pythons in tropical Australia
  69. Sea snakes rarely venture far from home
  70. Temporal and Spatial Complexity of Maternal Thermoregulation in Tropical Pythons
  71. Forest‐fire regimes affect thermoregulatory opportunities for terrestrial ectotherms
  72. Salinity influences the distribution of marine snakes: implications for evolutionary transitions to marine life
  73. The roles of pre- and post-hatching growth rates in generating a latitudinal cline of body size in the eastern fence lizard (Sceloporus undulatus)
  74. Interacting Impacts of Invasive Plants and Invasive Toads on Native Lizards
  75. Rapid evolution of parasite life history traits on an expanding range‐edge
  76. Ontogenetic shifts in a prey’s chemical defences influence feeding responses of a snake predator
  77. Sex at the Snake Den
  78. Natural history of the rough-scaled python, Morelia carinata (Serpentes: Pythonidae)
  79. How many of Australia?s ground-nesting birds are likely to be at risk from the invasive Cane Toad (Rhinella marina)?
  80. Phylogeography and dispersal in the velvet gecko (Oedura lesueurii), and potential implications for conservation of an endangered snake (Hoplocephalus bungaroides)
  81. Do drivers intentionally target wildlife on roads?
  82. Patterns of Interspecific Variation in the Heart Rates of Embryonic Reptiles
  83. Determinants of Habitat Selection by Hatchling Australian Freshwater Crocodiles
  84. Hot mothers, cool eggs: nest‐site selection by egg‐guarding spiders accommodates conflicting thermal optima
  85. Interactions Between Infective Helminth Larvae and Their Anuran Hosts
  86. Reduced investment in immune function in invasion-front populations of the cane toad (Rhinella marina) in Australia
  87. Interactions between native and invasive gecko lizards in tropical Australia
  88. Desiccation Risk Drives the Spatial Ecology of an Invasive Anuran (Rhinella marina) in the Australian Semi-Desert
  89. Why be a cannibal? The benefits to cane toad, Rhinella marina [=Bufo marinus], tadpoles of consuming conspecific eggs
  90. Using Combined Morphological, Allometric and Molecular Approaches to Identify Species of the Genus Raillietiella (Pentastomida)
  91. Genetic Connectivity among Populations of an Endangered Snake Species from Southeastern Australia (Hoplocephalus bungaroides, Elapidae)
  92. Climate-induced reaction norms for life-history traits in pythons
  93. Invasive species as drivers of evolutionary change: cane toads in tropical Australia
  94. Effects of seasonal aridity on the ecology and behaviour of invasive cane toads in the Australian wet–dry tropics
  95. School for Skinks: Can Conditioned Taste Aversion Enable Bluetongue Lizards (Tiliqua scincoides) to Avoid Toxic Cane Toads (Rhinella marina) as Prey?
  96. The effects of experimentally infecting Australian tree frogs with lungworms (Rhabdias pseudosphaerocephala) from invasive cane toads
  97. Tail waving in a lizard (Bassiana duperreyi) functions to deflect attacks rather than as a pursuit-deterrent signal
  98. CLIMATE CHANGE, MULTIPLE PATERNITY AND OFFSPRING SURVIVAL IN LIZARDS
  99. The enduring toxicity of road-killed cane toads (Rhinella marina)
  100. It's a dog‐eat‐croc world: dingo predation on the nests of freshwater crocodiles in tropical Australia
  101. You Are What You Eat: Parasite Transfer in Cannibalistic Cane Toads
  102. Phylogenetic relationships within laticaudine sea snakes (Elapidae)
  103. Chainsawing for conservation: Ecologically informed tree removal for habitat management
  104. Smart Moves: Effects of Relative Brain Size on Establishment Success of Invasive Amphibians and Reptiles
  105. Detecting the impact of invasive species on native fauna: Cane toads (Bufo marinus), frillneck lizards (Chlamydosaurus kingii) and the importance of spatial replication
  106. Intraspecific variation in the direction and degree of sex‐biased dispersal among sea‐snake populations
  107. Responses of Australian wading birds to a novel toxic prey type, the invasive cane toad Rhinella marina
  108. Establishment Success of Introduced Amphibians Increases in the Presence of Congeneric Species
  109. How well do predators adjust to climate-mediated shifts in prey distribution? A study on Australian water pythons
  110. Ecological impacts of invading species: Do parasites of the cane toad imperil Australian frogs?
  111. Morphological adaptations to marine life in snakes
  112. Foraging tactics of an ambush predator: the effects of substrate attributes on prey availability and predator feeding success
  113. Measuring amphibian immunocompetence: validation of the phytohemagglutinin skin‐swelling assay in the cane toad, Rhinella marina
  114. The ecological impact of invasive cane toads on tropical snakes: Field data do not support laboratory-based predictions
  115. Conflicts between feeding and reproduction in amphibious snakes (sea kraits, Laticauda spp.)
  116. Impacts of eggs and tadpoles of the invasive cane toad (Bufo marinus) on aquatic predators in tropical Australia
  117. Sexual dimorphism and sexual selection in a montane scincid lizard (Eulamprus leuraensis)
  118. Removing forest canopy cover restores a reptile assemblage
  119. Hatchling Australian freshwater crocodiles rapidly learn to avoid toxic invasive cane toads
  120. A small dasyurid predator (Sminthopsis virginiae) rapidly learns to avoid a toxic invader
  121. Assessing the potential impact of invasive cane toads on a commercial freshwater fishery in tropical Australia
  122. Can we use the tadpoles of Australian frogs to reduce recruitment of invasive cane toads?
  123. Predicting the effects of climate change on reproductive fitness of an endangered montane lizard, Eulamprus leuraensis (Scincidae)
  124. Foraging responses of predators to novel toxic prey: effects of predator learning and relative prey abundance
  125. Thermal Acclimation of Heart Rates in Reptilian Embryos
  126. Modeling the consequences of thermal trait variation for the cane toad invasion of Australia
  127. Influence of lung parasites on the growth rates of free-ranging and captive adult cane toads
  128. Toad’s tongue for breakfast: exploitation of a novel prey type, the invasive cane toad, by scavenging raptors in tropical Australia
  129. Why do the eggs of lizards (Bassiana duperreyi: Scincidae) hatch sooner if incubated at fluctuating rather than constant temperatures?
  130. Cues for cannibalism: cane toad tadpoles use chemical signals to locate and consume conspecific eggs
  131. Invasive species control: understanding conflicts between researchers and the general community
  132. Correction: Evolutionary Diversification of the Lizard Genus Bassiana (Scincidae) across Southern Australia
  133. The Physiological Basis of Geographic Variation in Rates of Embryonic Development within a Widespread Lizard Species
  134. INFECTION DYNAMICS OF THE LUNGWORM RHABDIAS PSEUDOSPHAEROCEPHALA IN ITS NATURAL HOST, THE CANE TOAD (BUFO MARINUS), AND IN NOVEL HOSTS (NATIVE AUSTRALIAN FROGS)
  135. Swimming speed variation in amphibious seasnakes (Laticaudinae): A search for underlying mechanisms
  136. When seasnake meets seabird: Ecosystem engineering, facilitation and competition
  137. Behavioural responses of native predators to an invasive toxic prey species
  138. Evolutionary Diversification of the Lizard Genus Bassiana (Scincidae) across Southern Australia
  139. Grass snakes exploit anthropogenic heat sources to overcome distributional limits imposed by oviparity
  140. The Ecological Impact of Invasive Cane Toads ( Bufo Marinus ) in Australia
  141. Plio-pleistocene diversification and connectivity between mainland and Tasmanian populations of Australian snakes (Drysdalia, Elapidae, Serpentes)
  142. Correlated geographic variation in predation risk and antipredator behaviour within a wide‐ranging snake species (Notechis scutatus, Elapidae)
  143. Facultative cardiac responses to regional hypoxia in lizard embryos
  144. Behavioural responses of carnivorous marsupials (Planigale maculata) to toxic invasive cane toads (Bufo marinus)
  145. Thermal effects on reptile reproduction: adaptation and phenotypic plasticity in a montane lizard
  146. The frog filter: amphibian introduction bias driven by taxonomy, body size and biogeography
  147. Life‐history evolution in range‐shifting populations
  148. Frogs under friendly fire: How accurately can the general public recognize invasive species?
  149. An invasive species imposes selection on life-history traits of a native frog
  150. Conditioned taste aversion enhances the survival of an endangered predator imperilled by a toxic invader
  151. Plio‐Pleistocene diversification and genetic population structure of an endangered lizard (the Blue Mountains water skink, Eulamprus leuraensis) in south‐eastern Australia
  152. A seasnake's colour affects its susceptibility to algal fouling
  153. Using a native predator (the meat ant,Iridomyrmex reburrus) to reduce the abundance of an invasive species (the cane toad,Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia
  154. Factors affecting the vulnerability of cane toads (Bufo marinus) to predation by ants
  155. Vulnerability of an Australian anuran tadpole assemblage to the toxic eggs of the invasive cane toad (Bufo marinus)
  156. Adaptation or preadaptation: why are keelback snakes (Tropidonophis mairii) less vulnerable to invasive cane toads (Bufo marinus) than are other Australian snakes?
  157. Embryos in the Fast Lane: High-Temperature Heart Rates of Turtles Decline After Hatching
  158. Indirect ecological impacts of an invasive toad on predator–prey interactions among native species
  159. Parasites and pathogens lag behind their host during periods of host range advance
  160. Modern approaches for the biological control of vertebrate pests: An Australian perspective
  161. Flexible Defense: Context-Dependent Antipredator Responses of Two Species of Australian Elapid Snakes
  162. Nesting in a thermally challenging environment: nest-site selection in a rock-dwelling gecko, Oedura lesueurii (Reptilia: Gekkonidae)
  163. Egg incubation temperature affects male reproductive success but not display behaviors in lizards
  164. Context-dependent avoidance of predatory centipedes by nocturnal geckos (Oedura lesueurii)
  165. Thermal regimes during incubation do not affect mean selected temperatures of hatchling lizards (Bassiana duperreyi, Scincidae)
  166. Ecology and conservation of the Pale-headed Snake ( Hoplocephalus bitorquatus , Elapidae)
  167. The power of myth: the (non) impact of invasive cane toads ( Bufo marinus ) on domestic chickens ( Gallus gallus )
  168. Predation on toxic cane toads ( Bufo marinus ) may imperil bluetongue lizards ( Tiliqua scincoides intermedia , Scincidae) in tropical Australia
  169. Climate-driven impacts of prey abundance on the population structure of a tropical aquatic predator
  170. Predicting the impact of climate change on Australia’s most endangered snake, Hoplocephalus bungaroides
  171. Genetic Assimilation and the Postcolonization Erosion of Phenotypic Plasticity in Island Tiger Snakes
  172. Impact of Invasive Cane Toads on Australian Birds
  173. Locomotor performance in an invasive species: cane toads from the invasion front have greater endurance, but not speed, compared to conspecifics from a long-colonised area
  174. Larval alarm pheromones as a potential control for invasive cane toads (Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia
  175. Something different for dinner? Responses of a native Australian predator (the keelback snake) to an invasive prey species (the cane toad)
  176. Offspring Sex in a Lizard Depends on Egg Size
  177. Corticosterone Exposure during Embryonic Development Affects Offspring Growth and Sex Ratios in Opposing Directions in Two Lizard Species with Environmental Sex Determination
  178. Chemical cues from both dangerous and nondangerous snakes elicit antipredator behaviours from a nocturnal lizard
  179. Maladaptive traits in invasive species: in Australia, cane toads are more vulnerable to predatory ants than are native frogs
  180. Maternal and environmental effects on offspring phenotypes in an oviparous lizard: do field data corroborate laboratory data?
  181. Species‐specific communication systems in an introduced toad compared with native frogs in Australia
  182. Quantifying historical changes in habitat availability for endangered species: use of pixel‐ and object‐based remote sensing
  183. Causes and consequences of aggregation by neonatal tiger snakes (Notechis scutatus, Elapidae)
  184. Sublethal costs associated with the consumption of toxic prey by snakes
  185. Isolation and development of a molecular sex marker for Bassiana duperreyi, a lizard with XX/XY sex chromosomes and temperature-induced sex reversal
  186. Ontogenetic Variation in the Chemical Defenses of Cane Toads (Bufo marinus): Toxin Profiles and Effects on Predators
  187. Does desiccation risk drive the distribution of juvenile cane toads (Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia?
  188. Spatial ecology of hatchling water pythons (Liasis fuscus) in tropical Australia
  189. Molecular and morphological assessment of Australia’s most endangered snake, Hoplocephalus bungaroides, reveals two evolutionarily significant units for conservation
  190. Beastly Bondage: The Costs of Amplexus in Cane Toads (Bufo marinus)
  191. Factors Influencing Responses to Alarm Pheromone by Larvae of Invasive Cane Toads, Bufo marinus
  192. The Relationship Between Foraging Ecology and Lizard Chemoreception: Can a Snake Analogue (Burton’s Legless Lizard,Lialis burtonis) Detect Prey Scent?
  193. Native Australian frogs avoid the scent of invasive cane toads
  194. Foreword
  195. Comparisons through time and space suggest rapid evolution of dispersal behaviour in an invasive species
  196. Nesting lizards (Bassiana duperreyi) compensate partly, but not completely, for climate change
  197. Predicting the ecological impact of cane toads ( Bufo marinus ) on threatened camaenid land snails in north-western Australia
  198. Sexual selection favours large body size in males of a tropical snake (Stegonotus cucullatus, Colubridae)
  199. Determinants of dietary specialization: a comparison of two sympatric species of sea snakes
  200. Climate effects on offspring sex ratio in a viviparous lizard
  201. Using Artificial Rocks to Restore Nonrenewable Shelter Sites in Human-Degraded Systems: Colonization by Fauna
  202. There’s more than one way to get a mating
  203. Three-dimensional crevice structure affects retreat site selection by reptiles
  204. Lizards combine stored energy and recently acquired nutrients flexibly to fuel reproduction
  205. Impact of the invasive cane toad (Bufo marinus) on an Australian frog (Opisthodon ornatus) depends on minor variation in reproductive timing
  206. The myth of the toad‐eating frog
  207. Population ecology of the velvet gecko, Oedura lesueurii in south eastern Australia: Implications for the persistence of an endangered snake
  208. A native dasyurid predator (common planigale, Planigale maculata) rapidly learns to avoid a toxic invader
  209. Interactions between locomotion, feeding, and bodily elongation during the evolution of snakes
  210. Maternal influences on offspring phenotypes and sex ratios in a multi-clutching lizard with environmental sex determination
  211. Origin of the parasites of an invading species, the Australian cane toad (Bufo marinus): are the lungworms Australian or American?
  212. Mass mortality of native anuran tadpoles in tropical Australia due to the invasive cane toad (Bufo marinus)
  213. The influence of hydric environments during egg incubation on embryonic heart rates and offspring phenotypes in a scincid lizard (Lampropholis guichenoti)
  214. Microsatellite loci for laticaudine sea kraits
  215. The behavioral ecology of cannibalism in cane toads (Bufo marinus)
  216. Differential Effects of an Intense Wildfire on Survival of Sympatric Snakes
  217. The spatial ecology of cane toads (Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia: Why do metamorph toads stay near the water?
  218. Reid’s Paradox Revisited: The Evolution of Dispersal Kernels during Range Expansion
  219. Morphological correlates of life-history variation: is lizard clutch size related to the number of germinal beds in the ovary?
  220. Early Experience Influences both Habitat Choice and Locomotor Performance in Tiger Snakes
  221. Sexual communication in cane toads, Chaunus marinus: what cues influence the duration of amplexus?
  222. Determinants of Dispersal Distance in Free‐Ranging Juvenile Lizards
  223. Maternal nest-site choice in a lizard with temperature-dependent sex determination
  224. Homalopsid Snakes: Evolution in the Mud . By John C Murphy. Malabar (Florida): Krieger Publishing. $68.50. viii + 249 p; ill.; index to scientific names and higher categories. ISBN: 978-1-57524-259-0. 2007.
  225. ESTIMATING SURVIVAL RATES OF UNCATCHABLE ANIMALS: THE MYTH OF HIGH JUVENILE MORTALITY IN REPTILES
  226. A Toad More Traveled: The Heterogeneous Invasion Dynamics of Cane Toads in Australia
  227. PERMANENT GENETIC RESOURCES: Characterization of tri‐ and tetranucleotide microsatellite loci for the slatey‐grey snake (Stegonotus cucullatus, Colubridae)
  228. Abiotic and biotic influences on the dispersal behavior of metamorph cane toads (Bufo marinus) in tropical Australia
  229. Tracking elusive timber rattlers with molecular genetics
  230. Understanding the toad code: Behavioural responses of cane toad (Chaunus marinus) larvae and metamorphs to chemical cues
  231. Deceptive digits: the functional significance of toe waving by cannibalistic cane toads, Chaunus marinus
  232. Australian tadpoles do not avoid chemical cues from invasive cane toads ( Bufo marinus )
  233. Tadpoles of invasive cane toads ( Bufo marinus ) do not respond behaviourally to chemical cues from tadpoles of four species of Australian frogs
  234. When Dinner Is Dangerous: Toxic Frogs Elicit Species‐Specific Responses from a Generalist Snake Predator
  235. Fitness effects of the timing of hatching may drive the evolution of temperature-dependent sex determination in short-lived lizards
  236. Do invasive cane toads (Chaunus marinus) compete with Australian frogs (Cyclorana australis)?
  237. Rapid prey‐induced shift in body size in an isolated snake population (Notechis scutatus, Elapidae)
  238. Interspecific conflict in lizards: Social dominance depends upon an individual's species not its body size
  239. Benefits of parental care: Do juvenile lizards obtain better‐quality habitat by remaining with their parents?
  240. Are the phenotypic traits of hatchling lizards affected by maternal allocation of steroid hormones to the egg?
  241. Rain, prey and predators: climatically driven shifts in frog abundance modify reproductive allometry in a tropical snake
  242. Dangerous food: lacking venom and constriction, how do snake-like lizards (Lialis burtonis, Pygopodidae) subdue their lizard prey?
  243. Fitness of juvenile lizards depends on seasonal timing of hatching, not offspring body size
  244. Why do female lizards lay their eggs in communal nests?
  245. Why is intraspecific niche partitioning more common in snakes than in lizards?
  246. Compensating for a bad start: catch‐up growth in juvenile lizards (Amphibolurus muricatus, agamidae)
  247. WINDOWS OF EMBRYONIC SEXUAL LABILITY IN TWO LIZARD SPECIES WITH ENVIRONMENTAL SEX DETERMINATION
  248. Sex‐based hatching asynchrony in an oviparous lizard (Bassiana duperreyi, Scincidae)
  249. Disentangling the complexities of vertebrate sex allocation: a role for squamate reptiles?
  250. Rapid expansion of the cane toad (Bufo marinus) invasion front in tropical Australia
  251. Offspring Sex Is Not Related to Maternal Allocation of Yolk Steroids in the Lizard Bassiana duperreyi (Scincidae)
  252. Germinal bed condition in a polyautochronic single-clutched lizard, Bassiana duperreyi (Scincidae)
  253. Effects of invasive cane toads on Australian mosquitoes: Does the dark cloud have a silver lining?
  254. Toad on the road: Use of roads as dispersal corridors by cane toads (Bufo marinus) at an invasion front in tropical Australia
  255. Sexual dimorphism in scale rugosity in sea snakes (Hydrophiidae)
  256. Effects of nest temperature and moisture on phenotypic traits of hatchling snakes (Tropidonophis mairii, Colubridae) from tropical Australia
  257. Reptiles
  258. Spawning site selection by feral cane toads (Bufo marinus) at an invasion front in tropical Australia
  259. Morphological variation does not influence locomotor performance within a cohort of hatchling lizards (Amphibolurus muricatus, Agamidae)
  260. A single survivor
  261. The Adaptive Significance of Sexually Dimorphic Scale Rugosity in Sea Snakes
  262. Size matters: extraordinary rodent abundance on an Australian tropical flood plain
  263. Factors affecting retreat‐site selection by coppertail skinks (Ctenotus taeniolatus) from sandstone outcrops in eastern Australia
  264. The language of lizards: interpreting the function of visual displays of the Indian rock lizard, Psammophilus dorsalis (Agamidae)
  265. Time of testing affects locomotor performance in nocturnal versus diurnal snakes
  266. Invasion and the evolution of speed in toads
  267. Rain, rats and pythons: Climate‐driven population dynamics of predators and prey in tropical Australia
  268. Ecological divergence between the sexes in reptiles
  269. Allometry and selection in a novel predator–prey system: Australian snakes and the invading cane toad
  270. THE ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF REPTILIAN VIVIPARITY IN THE TROPICS: TESTING THE MATERNAL MANIPULATION HYPOTHESIS
  271. Flexible mate choice: a male snake's preference for larger females is modified by the sizes of females encountered
  272. Is increased maternal basking an adaptation or a pre-adaptation to viviparity in lizards?
  273. Social aggregation by thick-tailed geckos ( Nephrurus milii , Gekkonidae): does scat piling play a role?
  274. THE ADAPTIVE SIGNIGICANCE OF REPTILIAN VIVIPARITY IN THE TROPICS: TESTING THE MATERNAL MANIPULATION HYPOTHESIS
  275. Spatial and temporal variation in the morphology (and thus, predicted impact) of an invasive species in Australia
  276. Life-History Evolution in Reptiles
  277. DOES MATE GUARDING PREVENT RIVAL MATING IN SNOW SKINKS? A TEST USING AFLP
  278. Battle of the sexes: forcibly inseminating male garter snakes target courtship to more vulnerable females
  279. The morphology, and hence impact, of an invasive species (the cane toad, Bufo marinus): changes with time since colonisation
  280. DOES LARGE BODY SIZE IN MALES EVOLVE TO FACILITATE FORCIBLE INSEMINATION? A STUDY ON GARTER SNAKES
  281. Spatial ecology of slatey-grey snakes (Stegonotus cucullatus, Colubridae) on a tropical Australian floodplain
  282. Synchrony in capture dates suggests cryptic social organization in sea snakes (Emydocephalus annulatus, Hydrophiidae)
  283. Do a male garter snake's energy stores limit his reproductive effort?
  284. DIFFERENT OPTIMAL OFFSPRING SIZES FOR SONS VERSUS DAUGHTERS MAY FAVOR THE EVOLUTION OF TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENT SEX DETERMINATION IN VIVIPAROUS LIZARDS
  285. THE ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENT SEX DETERMINATION: EXPERIMENTAL TESTS WITH A SHORT-LIVED LIZARD
  286. Does foraging mode influence sensory modalities for prey detection in male and female filesnakes, Acrochordus arafurae?
  287. Alternative male mating tactics in garter snakes, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis
  288. Nesting snakes (Tropidonophis mairii, Colubridae) selectively oviposit in sites that provide evidence of previous successful hatching
  289. Identifying sources of variation in reproductive and life-history traits among five populations of a Chinese lizard (Takydromus septentrionalis, Lacertidae)
  290. Do Changing Moisture Levels during Incubation Influence Phenotypic Traits of Hatchling Snakes ( Tropidonophis mairii , Colubridae)?
  291. ECOLOGICAL CONSEQUENCES OF AGONISTIC INTERACTIONS IN LIZARDS
  292. Do Female Garter Snakes Evade Males to Avoid Harassment or to Enhance Mate Quality?
  293. Habitat requirements of the threatened snake species Hoplocephalus stephensii (Elapidae) in eastern Australia
  294. Energy expenditure for parental care may be trivial for brooding pythons, Python regius
  295. Do lizards and snakes really differ in their ability to take large prey? A study of relative prey mass and feeding tactics in lizards
  296. Paternal alleles enhance female reproductive success in tropical pythons
  297. Scaling the heights: thermally driven arboreality in garter snakes
  298. Does intraspecific niche partitioning in a native predator influence its response to an invasion by a toxic prey species?
  299. Does body volume constrain reproductive output in lizards?
  300. Adaptive maternal cannibalism in snakes (Epicrates cenchria maurus, Boidae)
  301. Led by the Blind: Bandy-Bandy Snakes Vermicella annulata (Elapidae) Follow Blindsnake Chemical Trails
  302. Swimming and pregnancy in Tiger snakes, Notechis scutatus
  303. THE ADAPTIVE SIGNIFICANCE OF TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENT SEX DETERMINATION: EXPERIMENTAL TESTS WITH A SHORT-LIVED LIZARD
  304. DOES LARGE BODY SIZE IN MALES EVOLVE TO FACILITATE FORCIBLE INSEMINATION? A STUDY ON GARTER SNAKES
  305. How do water skinks avoid shelters already occupied by other lizards?
  306. Thermal regimes and diel activity patterns of four species of small elapid snakes from south-eastern Australia
  307. How can blind tiger snakes ( Notechis scutatus ) forage successfully?
  308. DIFFERENT OPTIMAL OFFSPRING SIZES FOR SONS VERSUS DAUGHTERS MAY FAVOR THE EVOLUTION OF TEMPERATURE-DEPENDENT SEX DETERMINATION IN VIVIPAROUS LIZARDS
  309. Morphological and Physiological Correlates of Hybrid Parthenogenesis
  310. Parental care protects against infanticide in the lizard Egernia saxatilis (Scincidae)
  311. Predatory Attacks to the Head vs. Body Modify Behavioral Responses of Garter Snakes
  312. How Do Nocturnal Snakes Select Diurnal Retreat Sites?
  313. Male red-sided garter snakes, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis, determine female mating status from pheromone trails
  314. Experimental analysis of retreat‐site selection by thick‐tailed geckos Nephrurus milii
  315. Incubation regimes of cold-climate reptiles: the thermal consequences of nest-site choice, viviparity and maternal basking
  316. Adaptive developmental plasticity in snakes
  317. Life history attributes of the threatened Australian snake (Stephen's banded snake Hoplocephalus stephensii, Elapidae)
  318. DOES VIVIPARITY EVOLVE IN COLD CLIMATE REPTILES BECAUSE PREGNANT FEMALES MAINTAIN STABLE (NOT HIGH) BODY TEMPERATURES?
  319. Competing for crevices: interspecific conflict influences retreat-site selection in montane lizards
  320. Evaluating Thermoregulation in Reptiles: The Fallacy of the Inappropriately Applied Method
  321. DEVELOPMENTAL SUCCESS, STABILITY, AND PLASTICITY IN CLOSELY RELATED PARTHENOGENETIC AND SEXUAL LIZARDS (HETERONOTIA, GEKKONIDAE)
  322. Species-isolating mechanisms in a mating system with male mate choice (garter snakes, Thamnophis spp.)
  323. Seasonal anorexia in the male red-sided garter snake, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis
  324. FITNESS BENEFITS OF RETREAT-SITE SELECTION: SPIDERS, ROCKS, AND THERMAL CUES
  325. The origin of snakes (Serpentes) as seen through eye anatomy
  326. Courtship tactics in garter snakes: how do a male's morphology and behaviour influence his mating success?
  327. Climate affects embryonic development in a viviparous snake, Vipera aspis
  328. DOES VIVIPARITY EVOLVE IN COLD CLIMATE REPTILES BECAUSE PREGNANT FEMALES MAINTAIN STABLE (NOT HIGH) BODY TEMPERATURES?
  329. DEVELOPMENTAL SUCCESS, STABILITY, AND PLASTICITY IN CLOSELY RELATED PARTHENOGENETIC AND SEXUAL LIZARDS (HETERONOTIA, GEKKONIDAE)
  330. DOES GENDER AFFECT A SCIENTIST'S RESEARCH OUTPUT IN EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY?
  331. Assessing the Potential Impact of Cane Toads on Australian Snakes
  332. Confusion within ‘mating balls’ of garter snakes: does misdirected courtship impose selection on male tactics?
  333. Does foraging mode influence life history traits? A comparative study of growth, maturation and survival of two species of sympatric snakes from south‐eastern Australia
  334. Cryptic Forcible Insemination: Male Snakes Exploit Female Physiology, Anatomy, and Behavior to Obtain Coercive Matings
  335. CANOPY STRUCTURE, MICROCLIMATE, AND HABITAT SELECTION BY A NOCTURNAL SNAKE, HOPLOCEPHALUS BUNGAROIDES
  336. Intraspecific habitat partitioning by the sea snake Emydocephalus annulatus (Serpentes, Hydrophiidae): the effects of sex, body size, and colour pattern
  337. Effects of pregnancy on locomotor performance: an experimental study on lizards
  338. A reluctant heliotherm: thermal ecology of the arboreal snake Hoplocephalus stephensii (Elapidae) in dense forest
  339. Antipredator Tactics of Amphibious Sea‐Snakes (Serpentes, Laticaudidae)
  340. Energetic costs of tail loss in a montane scincid lizard
  341. Female-biased natal and breeding dispersal in an alpine lizard, Niveoscincus microlepidotus
  342. Sunny side up: lethally high, not low, nest temperatures may prevent oviparous reptiles from reproducing at high elevations
  343. Aquatic and terrestrial locomotor speeds of amphibious sea‐snakes (Serpentes, Laticaudidae)
  344. A radiotelemetric study of movements and thermal biology of insular Chinese pit‐vipers (Gloydiusshedaoensis, Viperidae)
  345. Biological warfare in the garden pond: tadpoles suppress the growth of mosquito larvae
  346. When does a reproducing female viper (Vipera aspis) ‘decide’ on her litter size?
  347. Thermal biology of large snakes in cool climates: a radio-telemetric study of carpet pythons (Morelia spilota imbricata) in south-western Australia
  348. Clutch size manipulation, hatching success and offspring phenotype in the ball python (Python regius)
  349. Shelter-site use by five species of montane scincid lizards in south-eastern Australia
  350. Short and chubby or long and slim? Food intake, growth and body condition in free‐ranging pythons
  351. Reconstructing an Adaptationist Scenario: What Selective Forces Favor the Evolution of Viviparity in Montane Reptiles?
  352. Thermal correlates of foraging-site selection by Chinese pit-vipers (Gloydius shedaoensis, Viperidae)
  353. Why do Juvenile Chinese Pit‐Vipers (Gloydius shedaoensis) Select Arboreal Ambush Sites?
  354. Philopatry and Homing Behavior of Sea Snakes (Laticauda colubrina) from Two Adjacent Islands in Fiji
  355. GROWTH TO DEATH IN LIZARDS
  356. Fat Is Sexy for Females but Not Males: The Influence of Body Reserves on Reproduction in Snakes (Vipera aspis)
  357. Reproductive ecology of a tropical natricine snake, Tropidonophis mairii (Colubridae)
  358. REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATING MECHANISMS BETWEEN TWO SYMPATRIC SIBLING SPECIES OF SEA SNAKES
  359. Responses of three sympatric snake species to tropical seasonality in northern Australia
  360. SEXUAL DIMORPHISM IN LIZARD BODY SHAPE: THE ROLES OF SEXUAL SELECTION AND FECUNDITY SELECTION
  361. Do Dietary Habits Predict Scale Counts in Snakes?
  362. Pond attributes influence competitive interactions between tadpoles and mosquito larvae
  363. Eggs in autumn: responses to declining incubation temperatures by the eggs of montane lizards
  364. Geographic variation in sexual size dimorphism within a single snake species (Morelia spilota, Pythonidae)
  365. Capital‐breeding and reproductive effort in a variable environment: a longitudinal study of a viviparous snake
  366. Lying in Wait for Extinction: Ecological Correlates of Conservation Status among Australian Elapid Snakes
  367. Collectors endanger Australia's most threatened snake, the broad-headed snake Hoplocephalus bungaroides
  368. Low costs, high output: reproduction in an insular pit‐viper (Gloydius shedaoensis, Viperidae) from north‐eastern China
  369. Arboreal ambush site selection by pit-vipers Gloydius shedaoensis
  370. The Dangers of Life in the City: Patterns of Activity, Injury and Mortality in Suburban Lizards (Tiliqua scincoides)
  371. Taxonomic chauvinism
  372. What makes a species vulnerable to extinction? Comparative life‐history traits of two sympatric snakes
  373. Competition between tadpoles and mosquitoes: the effects of larval density and tadpole size
  374. Snakes in the garden: an analysis of reptiles “rescued” by community-based wildlife carers
  375. Dietary Habits and Reproductive Biology of Typhlopid Snakes from Southern Africa
  376. Phenotypic variation in an oviparous montane lizard (Bassiana duperreyi): the effects of thermal and hydric incubation environments
  377. Plastic vipers: influence of food intake on the size and shape of Gaboon vipers (Bitis gabonica)
  378. A phylogenetic analysis of variation in reproductive mode within an Australian lizard (Saiphos equalis, Scincidae)
  379. The influence of natural selection and sexual selection on the tails of sea-snakes (Laticauda colubrina)
  380. Modelling life history strategies with capture–recapture data: Evolutionary demography of the water skinkEulamprus tympanum
  381. DOES TOTAL REPRODUCTIVE EFFORT EVOLVE INDEPENDENTLY OF OFFSPRING SIZE?
  382. Heavily exploited but poorly known: systematics and biogeography of commercially harvested pythons (Python curtus group) in Southeast Asia
  383. The effect of short-term weather fluctuations on temperatures inside lizard nests, and on the phenotypic traits of hatchling lizards
  384. Costs of reproduction in a lizard species: a comparison of observational and experimental data
  385. Biotic and abiotic influences on activity patterns of insular pit-vipers (Gloydius shedaoensis, Viperidae) from north-eastern China
  386. Do snakes shrink?
  387. Changes in Plasma Progesterone in Relation to Vitellogenesis and Gestation in the Viviparous Snake Vipera aspis
  388. Energy versus risk: costs of reproduction in free‐ranging pythons in tropical Australia
  389. Feeding ecology, reproduction and sexual dimorphism in the colubrid snakeCrotaphopeltis hotamboeiain southern Africa
  390. Life Underground: Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of Two Amphisbaenian Species from Southern Africa
  391. Silver spoons and snake body sizes: prey availability early in life influences long‐term growth rates of free‐ranging pythons
  392. Silver spoons and snake body sizes: prey availability early in life influences long-term growth rates of free-ranging pythons
  393. Lizards as a plant's ‘hired help’: letting pollinators in and seeds out
  394. Post-hatching environment contributes greatly to phenotypic variation between two populations of the Australian garden skink, Lampropholis guichenoti
  395. Female mimicry in garter snakes: behavioural tactics of "she-males" and the males that court them
  396. Snakes: a new ‘model organism’ in ecological research?
  397. Reproductive versus ecological advantages to larger body size in female snakes, Vipera aspis
  398. Sources of Mortality of Large Elapid Snakes in an Agricultural Landscape
  399. Life‐history strategies in basal snakes: reproduction and dietary habits of the African thread snake Leptotyphlops scutifrons (Serpentes: Leptotyphlopidae)
  400. Paving the way for habitat restoration: can artificial rocks restore degraded habitats of endangered reptiles?
  401. Shrinking forest shrinks skink: morphological change in response to rainforest fragmentation in the prickly forest skink (Gnypetoscincus queenslandiae)
  402. Does Less-than-Annual Production of Offspring by Female Vipers (Vipera aspis) Mean Less-than-Annual Mating?
  403. Ecological traits and conservation biology of five fossorial ‘sand‐swimming’ snake species (Simoselaps: Elapidae) in south‐western Australia
  404. Ecological traits and conservation biology of five fossorial ‘sand-swimming’ snake species (Simoselaps: Elapidae) in south-western Australia
  405. Why do snakes have eyes? The (non-)effect of blindness in island tiger snakes ( Notechis scutatus )
  406. Reply from R. Shine
  407. Plasticity in Frequency of Reproduction in an Alpine Lizard, Niveoscincus microlepidotus
  408. Do incubation-induced changes in a lizard's phenotype influence its vulnerability to predators?
  409. Ecological Attributes of Two Commercially-Harvested Python Species in Northern Sumatra
  410. Why is sex determined by nest temperature in many reptiles?
  411. The adjustment of reproductive threshold to prey abundance in a capital breeder
  412. Can pregnant lizards adjust their offspring phenotypes to environmental conditions?
  413. Life History Consequences of Nest-Site Variation in Tropical Pythons (Liasis fuscus)
  414. Sex differences in optimal incubation temperatures in a scincid lizard species
  415. Reticulated pythons in Sumatra: biology, harvesting and sustainability
  416. Rainfall and rats: Climatically‐driven dynamics of a tropical rodent population
  417. Can relaxed time constraints on sperm production eliminate protandry in an ectotherm?
  418. Sperm Choice and Sperm Competition: Suggestions for Field and Laboratory Studies
  419. Timing of Parturition as a Maternal Care Tactic in an Alpine Lizard Species
  420. Capital versus Income Breeding: An Ectothermic Perspective
  421. Using thermal ecology to predict retreat-site selection by an endangered snake species
  422. Reptilian Viviparity and Dollo's Law
  423. Costs of reproduction and the evolution of sexual dimorphism in a ‘flying lizard’Draco melanopogon (Agamidae)
  424. Costs of reproduction and the evolution of sexual dimorphism in a ‘flying lizard’ Draco melanopogon (Agamidae)
  425. Chemosensory mate recognition may facilitate prolonged mate guarding by male snow skinks, Niveoscincus microlepidotus
  426. Costs of Reproduction in Conspecific Oviparous and Viviparous Lizards, Lerista bougainvillii
  427. Geographic variation in lizard phenotypes: importance of the incubation environment
  428. Ecological characteristics of a threatened snake species, Hoplocephalus bungaroides (Serpentes, Elapidae)
  429. Spatial subdivision within a population of tropical pythons (Liasis fuscus) in a superficially homogeneous habitat
  430. Heat, safety or solitude? Using habitat selection experiments to identify a lizard's priorities
  431. Sedentary snakes and gullible geckos: predator–prey coevolution in nocturnal rock-dwelling reptiles
  432. Reproductive Biology and Food Habits of Horned Adders, Bitis caudalis (Viperidae), from Southern Africa
  433. Reproductive Energy Allocation and Long-Term Energy Stores in a Viviparous Lizard (Eulamprus tympanum)
  434. Longterm effects of incubation temperatures on the morphology and locomotor performance of hatchling lizards (Bassiana duperreyi, Scincidae)
  435. Ecological traits of commercially harvested water monitors, Varanus salvator, in northern Sumatra
  436. The impact of bush-rock removal on an endangered snake species, Hoplocephalus bungaroides (Serpentes : Elapidae)
  437. Sperm choice by females
  438. A field study of spatial ecology and movements of a threatened snake species, Hoplocephalus bungaroides
  439. Advantages of Multiple Matings to Females: A Test of the Infertility Hypothesis Using Lizards
  440. Rejection of non-adaptive hypotheses for intraspecific variation in trophic morphology in gape-limited predators
  441. The Serpent World
  442. Out on a limb: Conservation implications of tree-hollow use by a threatened snake species (Hoplocephalus bungaroides: Serpentes, Elapidae)
  443. Prey Abundance and Predator Reproduction: Rats and Phytons on a Tropical Australian Floodplain
  444. Detecting life history trade-offs: measuring energy stores in "capital" breeders reveals costs of reproduction
  445. Sexual dimorphism in the tusked frog, Adelotus brevis (Anura:Myobatrachidae): the roles of natural and sexual selection
  446. Sperm selection by females
  447. Life-history evolution in Australian snakes: a path analysis
  448. Maternal Manipulation of Offspring Phenotypes via Nest-Site Selection in an Oviparous Lizard
  449. Natural History of the African Shieldnose Snake Aspidelaps scutatus (Serpentes, Elapidae)
  450. Patterns of Dominance in the Small Scincid Lizard Lampropholis guichenoti
  451. Paternal Genotype Influences Incubation Period, Offspring Size, and Offspring Shape in an Oviparous Reptile
  452. Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of the Endemic Melanesian Elapids: Are Tropical Snakes Really Different?
  453. Life on the Lowest Branch: Sexual Dimorphism, Diet, and Reproductive Biology of an African Twig Snake, Thelotornis capensis (Serpentes, Colubridae)
  454. Seasonal Migration of Predators and Prey‐‐A Study of Pythons and Rats in Tropical Australia
  455. Inbreeding depression in an isolated population of adders Vipera berus
  456. Commercial harvesting of giant lizards: The biology of water monitors Varanus salvator in southern Sumatra
  457. Thermal Biology of the Australian Forest Dragon, Hypsilurus spinipes (Agamidae)
  458. Sisters like it hot
  459. Sexual Size Dimorphism in Seabirds: A Reply to Croxall
  460. The evolution of viviparity within the Australian scincid lizardLerista bougainvillii
  461. Biology and Commercial Utilization of Acrochordid Snakes, with Special Reference to Karung (Acrochordus javanicus)
  462. Sexual Size Dimorphism in Relation to Frequency of Reproduction in Turtles (Testudines: Emydidae)
  463. The adaptive significance of colour pattern polymorphism in the Australian scincid lizard Lampropholis delicata
  464. Maternal body-volume as a constraint on reproductive output in lizards: evidence from the evolution of viviparity
  465. A New Hypothesis for the Evolution of Viviparity in Reptiles
  466. Patterns of Survival, Growth and Maturation in Turtles
  467. Allometric Patterns in the Ecology of Australian Snakes
  468. Effects of sex and reproductive mode on dietary composition of the reproductively bimodal scincid lizard, Lerista bougainvillii
  469. Rewards of promiscuity
  470. Population Demography of Arafura Filesnakes (Serpentes: Acrochordidae) in Tropical Australia
  471. Low Growth Rates and Delayed Maturation in Arafura Filesnakes (Serpentes: Acrochordidae) in Tropical Australia
  472. Costs of Reproduction Influence the Evolution of Sexual Size Dimorphism in Snakes
  473. National peculiarities, scientific traditions and research directions
  474. Components of Lifetime Reproductive Success in Adders, Vipera berus
  475. Can female adders multiply?
  476. Sexual Size Dimorphism in Snakes Revisited
  477. Feeding Habits and Reproductive Biology of Australian Pygopodid Lizards of the Genus Aprasia
  478. Sexual Dichromatism in Snakes of the Genus Vipera: A Review and a New Evolutionary Hypothesis
  479. An ethogram for the small scincid lizard Lampropholis guichenoti
  480. Choosing a rock: Perspectives of a bush-rock collector and a saxicolous lizard
  481. Costs of Reproduction in a Population of the Frog Crinia signifera (Anura: Myobatrachidae) from Southeastern Australia
  482. Patterns of Sexual Size Dimorphism in Seabirds of the Southern Hemisphere
  483. Sexual Dimorphism and Niche Divergence: Feeding Habits of the Arafura Filesnake
  484. Australian Snakes: A Natural History
  485. Dietary Habits of Australian Blindsnakes (Typhlopidae)
  486. Experimental Analysis of Thermally Dependent Behavior Patterns in the Scincid Lizard Lampropholis guichenoti
  487. Costs of reproduction in a population of European adders
  488. Prey-size selection, gape limitation and predator vulnerability in Australian blindsnakes (Typhlopidae)
  489. Male Mating Success and Body Size in European Grass Snakes
  490. Phenotypic Plasticity in Body Sizes and Sexual Size Dimorphism in European Grass Snakes
  491. Temporal Variability in Sexual Selection Acting on Reproductive Tactics and Body Size in Male Snakes
  492. Sexual Competition among Brothers May Influence Offspring Sex Ratio in Snakes
  493. A Rapid, Sexually Selected Shift in Mean Body Size in a Population of Snakes
  494. Costs of reproduction in lizards: escape tactics and susceptibility to predation
  495. Patterns of Survival, Growth, and Maturation in Snakes and Lizards
  496. Relative Clutch Mass and Body Shape in Lizards and Snakes: Is Reproductive Investment Constrained or Optimized?
  497. To find an ant: trail-following in Australian blindsnakes (Typhlopidae)
  498. Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of the Pacific Island Boas (Candoia)
  499. The Evolution of Reproductive Effort in Lizards and Snakes
  500. Why do female adders copulate so frequently?
  501. Determinants of reproductive success in female adders, Vipera berus
  502. Why are Clutch Sizes More Variable in Some Species than in Others?
  503. Intersexual Dietary Divergence and the Evolution of Sexual Dimorphism in Snakes
  504. Strangers in a Strange Land: Ecology of the Australian Colubrid Snakes
  505. Natural History of Australian Typhlopid Snakes
  506. Sexual Dimorphism and Dietary Divergence: Differences in Trophic Morphology between Male and Female Snakes
  507. Seasonal shifts in the thermoregulatory behaviour of australian blacksnakes, Pseudechis porphyriacus (serpentes: elapidae)
  508. Function and evolution of the frill of the frillneck lizard, Chlamydosaurus kingii (Sauria: Agamidae)
  509. Proximate Determinants of Sexual Differences in Adult Body Size
  510. Ecological Causes for the Evolution of Sexual Dimorphism: A Review of the Evidence
  511. Conservation and Reproduction of an Endangered Species: the Broad-Headed Snake, Hoplocephalus bungaroides (Elapidae)
  512. Alternative Models for the Evolution of Offspring Size
  513. Thermoregulation of Free-Ranging Diamond Pythons, Morelia spilota (Serpentes, Boidae)
  514. Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of Small Australian Snakes of the Genera Unechis and Suta (Elapidae)
  515. Why Male Garter Snakes Have Small Heads: The Evolution and Endocrine Control of Sexual Dimorphism
  516. Feeding Habits of the Diamond Python, Morelia s. spilota: Ambush Predation by a Boid Snake
  517. The evolution of viviparity in reptiles: A physiological model and its ecological consequences
  518. Life-history strategies of Australian lizards: a comparison between the tropics and the temperate zone
  519. Constraints on Reproductive Investment: A Comparison between Aquatic and Terrestrial Snakes
  520. Thermophilic response to feeding of the diamond python, Morelia s. spilota (Serpentes: Boidae)
  521. The Evolution of Large Body Size in Females: A Critique of Darwin's "Fecundity Advantage" Model
  522. Intraspecific Variation in Thermoregulation, Movements and Habitat Use by Australian Blacksnakes, Pseudechis porphyriacus (Elapidae)
  523. The Evolution of Viviparity: Ecological Correlates of Reproductive Mode within a Genus of Australian Snakes (Pseudechis: Elapidae)
  524. Ecological Ramifications of Prey Size: Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of Australian Copperhead Snakes (Austrelaps, Elapidae)
  525. Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of Australian Snakes of the Genus Hemiaspis (Elapidae)
  526. Natural History of Two Monotypic Snake Genera of Southwestern Australia, Elapognathus and Rhinoplocephalus (Elapidae)
  527. Biology of Australasian Frogs and Reptiles
  528. Evolutionary Advantages of Limblessness: Evidence from the Pygopodid Lizards
  529. Ecology of a Low-Energy Specialist: Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of the Arafura Filesnake (Acrochordidae)
  530. Sexual differences in morphology and niche utilization in an aquatic snake, Acrochordus arafurae
  531. Feeding Mechanisms in Pygopodid Lizards: How Can Lialis Swallow Such Large Prey?
  532. Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of the Australian Legless Lizards (Pygopodidae)
  533. Predation upon Filesnakes (Acrochordus arafurae) by Aboriginal Hunters: Selectivity with Respect to Body Size, Sex and Reproductive Condition
  534. Prey Constriction by Venomous Snakes: A Review, and New Data on Australian Species
  535. The seasonal timing of reproduction:
  536. Reproductive Biology and Food Habits of the Australian Elapid Snakes of the Genus Cryptophis
  537. Physiological and ecological questions on the evolution of reptilian viviparity
  538. Validation and use of 22Na turnover to measure food intake in free-ranging lizards
  539. Food Habits and Reproductive Biology of Australian Elapid Snakes of the Genus Denisonia
  540. Reptilian viviparity in cold climates: testing the assumptions of an evolutionary hypothesis
  541. Ecology of Highly Venomous Snakes: The Australian Genus Oxyuranus (Elapidae)
  542. Arboreality in Snakes: Ecology of the Australian Elapid Genus Hoplocephalus
  543. Ecology of the Australian Elapid Snake Echiopsis curta
  544. Ecology of the Australian Elapid Snake Tropidechis carinatus
  545. Parental Care and Mode of Fertilization in Ectothermic Vertebrates
  546. Ecology of Australian Elapid Snakes of the Genera Furina and Glyphodon
  547. Mating and Male Combat in Australian Blacksnakes, Pseudechis porphyriacus
  548. Venomous Snakes in Cold Climates: Ecology of the Australian Genus Drysdalia (Serpentes: Elapidae)
  549. Comparative Ecology of Three Australian Snake Species of the Genus Cacophis (Serpentes: Elapidae)
  550. Ecology of Eastern Australian Whipsnakes of the Genus Demansia
  551. ?Costs? of reproduction in reptiles
  552. Reproduction, Feeding and Growth in the Australian Burrowing Snake Vermicella annulata
  553. Paternity and the evolution of male parental care
  554. Sexual size dimorphism and sexual selection in turtles (order testudines)
  555. Iteroparous Animals that Skip Opportunities for Reproduction
  556. The Evolution of Live-Bearing in Lizards and Snakes
  557. Sexual Selection and Sexual Dimorphism in the Amphibia
  558. Propagule size and parental care: The “safe harbor” hypothesis
  559. Sexual size dimorphism and male combat in snakes
  560. Habitats, diets, and sympatry in snakes: a study from Australia
  561. Skewed Sex Ratios in Snakes
  562. Influences of incubation requirements on the evolution of viviparity
  563. Cross-dressing in Chemical Cues: Exploring ‘She-maleness’ in Newly-emerged Male Garter Snakes